nytimes.com
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Photographs by Tony Cenicola/The New York Times; Rackets courtesy of The International Tennis Hall of Fame and Museum's permanent collection and Wilson Sources: Steve Flink, tennis historian, author and columnist for tennischannel.com; Joel Drucker, tennis historian, author and correspondent who covers Grand Slam events for the Tennis Channel; John Barrett, tennis historian, author, former tennis correspondent for the financial Times and broadcaster for BBC from 1971-2006; Wilson; Dunlop Sport.

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livelymorgue: July 13, 1935: Inside the kitchen of an apartment at Boulevard Gardens in Queens, a high-rise development where the average rent was $11 per room. This photograph, and dozens of others from the visual archives of The New York Times, appears in "A Short History of the Highrise," a four-part interactive documentary film about the 2,500-year history of vertical living that was published on Tuesday.

jmyint.tumblr.com
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nprradiopictures: It's official! #NPRDumplingWeek is here! Each day we'll post a little (semi-instructional) guide to the art of making different dumplings found around the world. Today: Jiaozi! Chef Scott Drewno of The Source assembles his original take on Chinese potstickers with cherries, apricots and raisins added to the classic filling of pork, cabbage, garlic, ginger and herbs.

nytimes.com
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When the farmers' markets are full of white eggplants, shell beans, baby squash, multicolored carrots and greens whose names you don't even know, it's time to go shopping: without knowing what you're looking for, without any kind of plan, just shopping to buy what looks or tastes good - or what the farmer tells you is good.

nytimes.com
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FOUR SQUARE BLOCKS: WILLIAMSBURG When the Future Perfect opened a decade ago in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, its only real competitors were vintage furniture and resale shops. North Sixth Street, where the company put down roots, was "desolate," its owner, David Alhadeff, recalled.

nytimes.com
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FOUR SQUARE BLOCKS: WILLIAMSBURG When the Future Perfect opened a decade ago in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, its only real competitors were vintage furniture and resale shops. North Sixth Street, where the company put down roots, was "desolate," its owner, David Alhadeff, recalled.

nytimes.com
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FOUR SQUARE BLOCKS: WILLIAMSBURG When the Future Perfect opened a decade ago in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, its only real competitors were vintage furniture and resale shops. North Sixth Street, where the company put down roots, was "desolate," its owner, David Alhadeff, recalled.